Sutherland Phonological Awareness Test-Revised - OLSEL-B

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Transcript Sutherland Phonological Awareness Test-Revised - OLSEL-B

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Phonemic awareness
◦ Awareness of individual sounds.
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Phonics
◦ Knowledge of letter-sound patterns; linking sounds
with letter.
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Orthographic knowledge
◦ Patterns of letters used in written English to write
words (graphemes), letter- cluster knowledge
(diagraphs).
Test-Dr Roslyn Neilson
Language , Speech and Literacy Services
Jamberoo, NSW
First published ;May,2003
Reprinted January 2005, November 2007
Copyright:2003 Roslyn Neilson
Contact details: Email:[email protected]
Phonological Knowledge is the foundation of
 our understanding of how spoken words
translate into written words.
Phonological Knowledge is what we know
 about the sound patterns in our words.
We use it in a range of ways:
 Unlock the alphabet
 Learn new words.
 Help remember information for a short time.
 When we read – segmenting, blending, manipulating
sounds.
 When we spell
Phonological awareness is an awareness of sound and an
awareness that words:
 can be broken up into syllables, (hos-pit-al)
 can rhyme, (can, fan, man)
 can start with the same sound, (never, naughty)
 can be broken up into first sound or sounds and the
rime pattern eg.(s-and) (st-and),
 can be formed by blending separate sounds together
eg.(f-i-s-h or f-ish makes fish)
 can be segmented into separate sounds (s-a-n-d),
 can be changed around by adding, removing or reordering sounds to make new words (minus s, sand =
and, change a to e sand = send)
Word
awareness
Syllable
awareness
Early
Rhyme
awareness
Segmenting
into
onset-rime
Segmenting
first and last
sounds
Blending
sounds
Late
Segmenting
words
Manipulating
sounds
Assessing phonological awareness
efficiently:
–A knowledge of why particular skills
are being assessed
–What should be expected of children
at different stages of development
–How the task format can effect
performance
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Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
Subtest
1: Syllable Counting
2: Rhyme Detection
3: Rhyme Production
4: CVC Blending
5: Onset Identification
6: Final Phoneme Identification
7: CVC Segmentation
8: Segmentation – Blends
9: Deletion – Onset
10: Deletion – Boundary Consonant
11: Deletion – Internal Consonant
◦ Nonword Reading and Spelling: General Comment
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Subtest 12: Nonword Reading
Subtest 13: Nonword Spelling
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Subtests 1-11 are auditory tests (no reading
or written responses)
◦ Assesses the following phonological awareness
skills
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Syllable counting
rhyme detection and production
identification of initial and final consonants
deletion of onsets
deletion of consonants within blends including
consonants on the outer boundary of syllables and
internal consonants
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Subtests 12 and 13
◦ involved the reading and spelling of nonwords
 CVC syllable (sut)
 single syllables with initial and or final consonant
blends (trop, belk)
 vowel digraph that can be read or spelled with analogy
to a real word (vouse)
 2 syllable nonword with consonant blends (mitspon)
 3 syllable nonword without intra-syllabic consonant
blends (despintal)
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The SPAT-R Manual
The Stimulus Sheet Booklet
Test booklet or a screening scoresheet
2 forms – form A and form B- recommended
that a different form is used if a child is
retested on the SPAT-R within 6 months
Subtest/s
Description
1
Drums for syllable counting
2
Pictures for rhyme detection
7 and 8
Boxes for phoneme segmentation
12
Nonwords:reading
13
Instructions for nonword spelling.
This sheet is not shown to the child.
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Subtests 1-11
◦ 1 demonstration item
◦ 1 practice item
◦ 4 test items
Discontinuation Guidelines:
◦ Discontinue any individual subtest if:
 Child does not respond to teaching on the practice
items
 AND fails the first 2 test items
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Subtest 12 and 13
– 8 test items
– no demonstration or practice items
Discontinuation Guidelines:
– Discontinue either subtest if:
• Child has no strategies for attempting the first two
items
• The child seems stressed
– Continue if:
• incorrect response, but signs of partial processing
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Orients the child to the process of attending
to the sounds in words, rather than to their
meaning.
When finding this subtest difficult, a student
may show some articulation problems,
especially with multisyllabic words.
Undemanding in terms of cognitive
requirements and memory load
Uses pictures to support the student’s
memory for the rhyming words
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Very sensitive to the presence of oral language
difficulties
In the lower years of schooling it is often a
marker for students with reading difficulties
Students who do not have awareness of rhyming
features of language will often give semantically
related answers e.g. night, fight, pillow
If students are ok on rhyme detection task, but
not on rhyme production task, this may indicate
the effects of word retrieval difficulties
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This task has a high correlation to the SPAT-R
total score. This means that if the student has
difficulties on this task, they are likely to
score poorly overall.
If students perform strongly on this subtest it
can indicate a students strong emerging
control over phonological awareness
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“Children who cannot identify onsets early in
their school career are particularly at risk for
experiencing difficulties in their literacy
development”- Ref: Byrne,1998
Potential difficulties with learning the
alphabet
Phoneme vs letter
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It cannot be assumed that once a child can
identify the sound at the beginning of a word,
the sound at the end of a word will be equally
accessible
Phoneme vs letter
Segmentation and blending are
complementary skills
• “Say it and move it technique”
Potential problems with this test• 1.identification of a nasal consonant after a
vowel
• 2. Students who are able to visualise the
spelling of the words may possibly be
confused about whether they are working
with sounds or letters
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In the lower years of schooling students find
it difficult to identify the separate sounds in
consonant blends. This is normally a late
developing phonological skill (Treiman,1993)
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A robust indicator of phonological awareness
development –
Ref:Catts,Fey,Zhang&Tomblin,2001
The emergence of this skill by the end of
YOS 1 or early in YOS 2 is a good indicator
that a child is making reasonable progress
If a child is unable to access and manipulate
the sound of the rime unit as an independent
chunk of a word, they may experience
difficulties with identifying word families in
spelling tasks
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Issue of task complexity- leading to errors
Requires the student to be aware of the
internal sounds in consonant blends
Students with less experience may delete the
whole onset- this indicates that the separate
sounds in the consonant blend are not
particularly salient to them
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Student has to segment , delete and then
blend phonemes
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Use of the nonword spelling analysis
Allows clear demonstration of consonant
blend segmentation skills
Is particularly sensitive to emerging skills of
phoneme segmentation in the early years of
school
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Analysis of non – word spelling form
To clarify student specific needs Analysis of the data
 Use of normative table
 Links with other data
 Reference to developmental sequence
 Determine priorities for support and
practice
 Review regularly – rate of gain
We must not, in trying to think about how we
can make a big difference, ignore the small
daily differences we can make which, over
time, add up to big differences that we often
cannot foresee.
Ref:Marian Wright Edelman